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05-17-2010, 08:41 AM | #31 | |
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All of the rest of this has been gone over so many times I cannot bear to rehash it. If Jesus was such an obscure little prophet that no one noticed him, you have the problem of explaining the speed with which he was deified and all details of his life overlaid with myth, and other details. But you have basically made his existence unfalsifiable, so there's not much to discuss there. If you want to engage mythicism, please move beyond this issue to something more sophisiticated. |
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05-17-2010, 08:41 AM | #32 | ||
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But, for those of us lay people who think otherwise . . . I agree that we'd have to reconsider our position that Le Morte d'Arthur had no connection at all with historical fact. Quote:
The only hyperbole was in the "everything" and the specificity of Cephas, James, and John. Of course those three didn't have to be the ones who tutored Paul about Jesus' ministry. But on the historicist assumption, somebody had to tell him something about what Jesus said and did before he was crucified -- and whatever they told him had to be enough to convince him that Jesus really had risen from the dead, and really was the son of God, and really was the Christ, and really was the savior of the world. |
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05-17-2010, 09:01 AM | #33 | |
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Jiri |
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05-17-2010, 09:13 AM | #34 | ||||
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It is ad hoc speculation, but it seems to fit the evidence. The mythicist speculations do not seem to fit the evidence. The gospels, though generally not trustworthy, do attest to Peter, James and John being core disciples, a point that seems to fit Paul's regard for them, as reputed pillars and apostles to the Jews. And, Paul really did believe that Jesus was a human being who lived recently, though the attestations in Paul are scarce and perhaps doubtful in the minds of the highly skeptical. |
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05-17-2010, 09:34 AM | #35 | ||
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05-17-2010, 10:35 AM | #36 |
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There is a discussion of the Argument to the Best Explanation (ABE) here in Carrier's review of Doherty's Jesus Puzzle. I expect he will come out with more in his forthcoming book.
If you redefine the historical Jesus to some unknown Palestinian peasant, no one will ever be able to show that Jesus existed or did not exist. It makes more sense to reframe the question as how did Christianity begin? Did it start, as the Christian legend claims, with a group of followers of a crucified nobody who were inspired to start a movement that was underground for decades or a century before making an impact, or did it start some other way? But while you are thinking about this, I find it hard to discuss this with someone who admits that the gospels and the NT are not good historical sources, but also thinks that only a hyper-skeptic would not believe the basic claims in the gospels, just like the religious believers. |
05-17-2010, 11:21 AM | #37 | |||
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A simple answer to the Paul ‘problem’ is that there was a historical man involved with the early pre-christian movement. This man had an impact upon those who knew him. He had friends or followers. How these followers viewed this man in light of the OT prophecies is what is relevant. The man dies a natural death. (no crucifixion) His followers keep alive his memory by telling stories; remembering his words etc. For the sake of argument - lets say his followers imagined this man as somehow having some significance re interpreting OT prophecy re messianic expectations. So they end up with a little community, a movement of sorts. Along comes someone called Paul. Paul does not like the inferences he is getting from this group re messianic ideas etc and tries to put a stop to the messianic nonsense. However, a little later Paul has a vision. Paul has a new take on things. What has been going on is just not right. The OT prophecies need to be re-evaluated as being about a spiritual not a flesh and blood messiah figure. And anyway, the historical figure that the pre-Paul group had found to be so inspirational was not 100% Jewish to boot. Sure, in days gone by, Cyrus was once the anointed one - but now the time had come for real change - a spiritual not a flesh and blood messiah. Paul seeks to turn the focus away from the historical man involved with the early movement and seeks to transform the movement into a religion of spirituality not bound by flesh and blood or earthly temples. Paul was on a mission, his mission - to turn upside down the early movement. No bloodlines, no hereditary positions. Paul’s messiah figure would be a purely spiritual construct. Paul is his own man - his ‘truth’ is not dependent upon the words or sayings of any historical man. Paul plays his own tune and only seeks recognition from the ‘pillars’ not authority. In time the historical origins of early Christianity would be overshadowed by Paul’s spiritual construct and it’s ‘flesh and blood’ counterpart in the gospel Jesus storyline. Paul, whoever he was, was a man with big ideas - and the strength of character to take what had gone before and attempt to mold it to his own vision. Perhaps Paul could be called the first Christian - but to overlook the historical backbone to Paul’s spiritual construct is to do both Paul and Christian history a disservice. Paul moved things forward, moved in another direction - but he did not, by his own admission, set in motion the pre-christian movement that was to become Christianity. So, bottom line in all of this: Jesus of Nazareth is not a historical figure but a mythological or symbolic creation. Prior to the Jesus storyboard , the pre-christian movement involved a historical man who was deemed to be inspirational by his friends and followers. This man was not crucified and his name was not Jesus. Thus, the mythicists are correct - no historical Jesus. But the historicists are correct in their insistence upon there being a historical grounding, a historical figure that was relevant - albeit to a pre-christian movement - a movement that existed prior to Paul. That’s my take on things - as of now...... |
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05-17-2010, 11:30 AM | #38 | |
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I agree, too, with your proposition to reformulate the relevant question to, "How did Christianity begin?", because the best way to find the most probable conclusion for whether or not Jesus existed (if that conclusion matters to us) is to compare competing theories of what started Christianity. We have external patterns of how religions begin and develop, and we have the most reliable data concerning how Christianity developed, not so much for who Jesus was. |
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05-17-2010, 12:09 PM | #39 | |
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But, what you have proposed is NOT a simple solution. There were people who would have known Jesus was NOT a Messiah or the Son of a God. King David was NOT worshiped as a God and called the Creator of heaven and earth. Simon bar Cocheba the Messiah was NOT worshiped as a God and called the Creator of heaven and earth. Jews did NOT worship humans as Gods and claimed their God ALONE was the Creator of heaven and earth. The NT Canon and the Pauline writings would have been deemed to be non-sense if it was presented to Jews before the Fall of the Jewish Temple. We have the writings of Philo, a contemporary of the supposed Paul and Jesus, and in his writings it is shown that Jews would most likely NOT worship a man as a God and would NOT have claimed JESUS was the Creator of everything in heaven and earth. We have the writings of Josephus which demonstrated the same as Philo that JEWS would NOT have worshiped a man as a God and call him the Creator of heaven and earth. The Pauline writings are NOT from the 1st century is the simplest solution based on the ABUNDANCE of Evidence from antiquity. That's my take. |
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05-17-2010, 12:22 PM | #40 | ||
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There is nothing whatsoever in what I have written, in any shape or form, that is support for any argument about a man being worshiped as god by Jews... |
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